Leonard Rockshelter
Description
The Leonard Rockshelter is located on a limestone outcrop in rural Pershing County, Nevada. It is an uplifted dike, whose layers are turned sharply upward, and have since been in part covered by subsequent sedimentary deposits. The formation yields a sheltered area facing north, with scree slopes of tufa limestone eroded from the formation below it. Portions of the sheltered area have been obscured by rock falls from above, making archaeological excavation or analysis difficult.
The area first attracted archaeological attention in 1936, when guano miners recovered artifacts from the site, including shell beads, feathers, and wooden projectiles. The following year, a team from the University of California at Berkeley spent two days at the site, collecting a larger number of samples. Some of these were later radiocarbon dated to between 6710 and 5088 BCE. Further analysis has indicated that there were at least three distinct periods of occupation in prehistory, in addition to historic artifacts from the 19th century. One find dating to c. 3500 BCE was of an infant burial in a basket that had become complete carbonized over time. The oldest dated finds at the site are to c. 9249 BCE, not long after the recession of prehistoric Lake Lahontan from the region.
See also
- Paleo-Indians
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Nevada
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Pershing County, Nevada
References
- ^ "Leonard Rockshelter". National Historic Landmark Program. National Park Service. Archived from the original on September 16, 2010. Retrieved January 22, 2008.
- ^ Gordon L. Grosscup (February 15, 1957). "Reports of the University of California Archaeological Survey No. 36" (PDF). Berkeley, Calif.: Department of Anthropology, University of California: 1. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
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(help) - ^ Helene R. Dubar, Staff Archeologist (March 25, 1985). "Leonard Rockshelter National Historic Landmark (redacted)" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved February 13, 2017. Revised significance statement and boundary description provided by Donald R. Tuohy, Nevada State Museum.